China Daily

Shares edge higher as selloff seen as excessive

- By BLOOMBERG

Stocks staged an afternoon recovery to edge higher amid speculatio­n that a selloff that sent the benchmark equity gauge to its steepest loss in six weeks was excessive. Automobile and utility companies led gains.

The Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.1 percent at the close, after dropping as much as 0.8 percent. SAIC Motor Corp climbed for a third day to pace carmakers higher, while China Yangtze Power Co rose to its highest level this year.

The advance comes after stocks sank on Wednesday on concerns that regulators would restrict investment­s in equities. The China Banking Regulatory Commission is said to be planning a crackdown on the $3.5 trillion wealth management product market. The initial draft states that cash from “mass market” wealth products can only be invested in money or bond markets, and not in domestical­ly listed shares, said a person with direct knowledge of the matter.

“The panic selling on

Ronald Wan, chief executive at Partners Capital Internatio­nal Ltd in Hong Kong

Wednesday was overdone,” Ronald Wan, chief executive at Partners Capital Internatio­nal Ltd in Hong Kong. “Curbs on wealth management products have been there for a while, even though further tightening will slow fund flows into stocks.”

The Shanghai equity gauge rose to 2,994.32 points. The ChiNext Index of smaller companies fell 0.7 percent to a one-month low, after sliding as much as 2.1 percent during the session.

The securities regulator has already restricted the use of leverage by structured asset management plans, and reportedly warned brokerages to do better due-diligence when raising money for companies. The Shenzhen Stock Exchange will demand improved disclosure and limit speculatio­n on stocks in popular industries such as virtual reality and artificial intelligen­ce, according to a statement in the Securities Daily.

Authoritie­s including the CBRC have noticed that bursting bubbles in the property, securities investment and commodity sectors may worsen bad loans and even affect the stability of the banking system, the 21 st Century Business Herald reported, citing a person close to regulators.

China has been tightening rules on WMPs since late 2014. The products are a key reason behind the growth in the shadow-banking industry, which Moody’s Investors Service estimates is worth more than 50 trillion yuan, and have been used by some financial institutio­ns as a way to extend funds to risky borrowers and evade capital requiremen­ts. WMPs are sold by banks but often stay off their balance sheets.

The panic selling on Wednesday was overdone.”

 ?? XU CONGJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An investor checks stock prices at a securities brokerage in Nantong, Jiangsu province.
XU CONGJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY An investor checks stock prices at a securities brokerage in Nantong, Jiangsu province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong